Any decent PSU made in the last 15 years is basically a 12V PSU with a small DC to DC card added for the +3.3V and +5V.You are underestimating how much 12VO simplifies the PSU design and the number of things that can go wrong on a system. 12VO turns the PSU into glorified laptop power brick, and all the complexity of dealing with lower voltages goes to the motherboard. You won't need a seasonic PSU for stability if all it gives you is a single 12V line.
That is only true with mag-amp regulated, or "group regulated" PSUs, which was the norm maybe 20 years ago and not something any enthusiast user would use today or over the last 15 years. As stated before, quality PSUs today are already +12V PSUs. They just have a small DC to DC card that regulates the minor rails. Honestly, no offense, but I wonder when the last time you read a PSU review was.The reason you need "a quality power supply" is because loading the 12V power line, destabilizes the 3.3V and 5V and causes system problems.
Yeah.... so.... a laptop has a battery that acts as sort of a "bulk cap", so bad analogy there. The PSU cannot "brownout" to 8V with expectations for the PC to continue running. Again, not much changes on the board with ATX12VO versus today.If all you use throughout the system is 12V and all of it is behind a switching VRMs, you can brownout down to 8V and the system will still be standing and working normally. Any laptop power brick can handle that. In fact, there is a reason laptops never have problems with PSU stabilities. Its exactly because they are using a single voltage, and every power plane on the motherboard is behind a VRM. In fact, when laptops are switching between a power brick and the battery, the main voltage plane loses 2-3V, and the laptop is still ok.
Seasonic makes "a couple" Asus PSUs. The Thor Platinum and the lower wattage Strix Gold.Seasonic makes ASUS branded PSU's.
System Name | Karl Arsch v. u. z. Abgewischt |
---|---|
Processor | i5 3770K @5GHz delided |
Motherboard | ASRock Z77 Professional |
Cooling | Arctic Liquid Freezer 240 |
Memory | 4x 4GB 1866 MHz DDR3 |
Video Card(s) | GTX 970 |
Storage | Samsung 830 - 512GB; 2x 2TB WD Blue |
Display(s) | Samsung T240 1920x1200 |
Case | Bitfenix Shinobie XL |
Audio Device(s) | onboard |
Power Supply | Cougar G600 |
Mouse | Logitech G500 |
Keyboard | CMStorm Ultimate QuickFire (CherryMX Brown) |
Software | Win7 Pro 64bit |
You are underestimating how much 12VO simplifies the PSU design and the number of things that can go wrong on a system. 12VO turns the PSU into glorified laptop power brick, and all the complexity of dealing with lower voltages goes to the motherboard. You won't need a seasonic PSU for stability if all it gives you is a single 12V line.
The reason you need "a quality power supply" is because loading the 12V power line, destabilizes the 3.3V and 5V and causes system problems.
If all you use throughout the system is 12V and all of it is behind a switching VRMs, you can brownout down to 8V and the system will still be standing and working normally. Any laptop power brick can handle that. In fact, there is a reason laptops never have problems with PSU stabilities. Its exactly because they are using a single voltage, and every power plane on the motherboard is behind a VRM. In fact, when laptops are switching between a power brick and the battery, the main voltage plane loses 2-3V, and the laptop is still ok.
With this change, the PSU quality discussion will go out the window. You will literally get 1200W platinum PSUs for 50-80$ instead of 250$.
System Name | Karl Arsch v. u. z. Abgewischt |
---|---|
Processor | i5 3770K @5GHz delided |
Motherboard | ASRock Z77 Professional |
Cooling | Arctic Liquid Freezer 240 |
Memory | 4x 4GB 1866 MHz DDR3 |
Video Card(s) | GTX 970 |
Storage | Samsung 830 - 512GB; 2x 2TB WD Blue |
Display(s) | Samsung T240 1920x1200 |
Case | Bitfenix Shinobie XL |
Audio Device(s) | onboard |
Power Supply | Cougar G600 |
Mouse | Logitech G500 |
Keyboard | CMStorm Ultimate QuickFire (CherryMX Brown) |
Software | Win7 Pro 64bit |
Doesn't work that way - you need "transformers" for the specific needs of single components.I don't know if I'm wrong, but in the end all the components of a PC should be under the same voltage, be it 12V or 5V, then add connections based on the expected consumption of the board and the components... 1, 2, 3... .and bring everything to a single electrical standard and it would be the most convenient for the digital ecosystem...
Maybe "lost in translation", but you don't need a "transformer" to buck or boost DC to DC.Doesn't work that way - you need "transformers" for the specific needs of single components.
I don't know if I'm wrong, but in the end all the components of a PC should be under the same voltage, be it 12V or 5V, then add connections based on the expected consumption of the board and the components... 1, 2, 3... .and bring everything to a single electrical standard and it would be the most convenient for the digital ecosystem...
And what doe you replace on most laptop boards? Right the VRM because they pop left, right middle and center because they take the cheapest crap and put it on. The same will happen to the boards, and it will kill your CPU, GPU and so on. Remember my words. The industry is not built around reliability for customers anymore. That period is sadly long gone, and a good and reliable PSU company will step in and replace your parts if the PSU failed horribly (had this with be quiet). Companies like MSI, Gigabyte and Asus are avoiding it like hell and will blame the customer.
System Name | Karl Arsch v. u. z. Abgewischt |
---|---|
Processor | i5 3770K @5GHz delided |
Motherboard | ASRock Z77 Professional |
Cooling | Arctic Liquid Freezer 240 |
Memory | 4x 4GB 1866 MHz DDR3 |
Video Card(s) | GTX 970 |
Storage | Samsung 830 - 512GB; 2x 2TB WD Blue |
Display(s) | Samsung T240 1920x1200 |
Case | Bitfenix Shinobie XL |
Audio Device(s) | onboard |
Power Supply | Cougar G600 |
Mouse | Logitech G500 |
Keyboard | CMStorm Ultimate QuickFire (CherryMX Brown) |
Software | Win7 Pro 64bit |
English isn't my 1st language and I don't have a degree or an education in electronics relatet. What I meant is the first step AC->DC and after that you have to "step down" to different voltages, relatet toMaybe "lost in translation", but you don't need a "transformer" to buck or boost DC to DC.
You would need a transformer in an AC to DC power supply. Not DC to DC.English isn't my 1st language and I don't have a degree or an education in electronics relatet. What I meant is the first step AC->DC and after that you have to "step down" to different voltages, relatet to
ArcanisGK507
post relevant would be the "step down" to the different voltages needed by different components.
System Name | "Icy Resurrection" |
---|---|
Processor | 13th Gen Intel Core i9-13900KS Special Edition |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG MAXIMUS Z790 APEX ENCORE |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D15S upgraded with 2x NF-F12 iPPC-3000 fans and Honeywell PTM7950 TIM |
Memory | 32 GB G.SKILL Trident Z5 RGB F5-6800J3445G16GX2-TZ5RK @ 7600 MT/s 36-44-44-52-96 1.4V |
Video Card(s) | ASUS ROG Strix GeForce RTX™ 4080 16GB GDDR6X White OC Edition |
Storage | 500 GB WD Black SN750 SE NVMe SSD + 4 TB WD Red Plus WD40EFPX HDD |
Display(s) | 55-inch LG G3 OLED |
Case | Pichau Mancer CV500 White Edition |
Power Supply | EVGA 1300 G2 1.3kW 80+ Gold |
Mouse | Microsoft Classic Intellimouse |
Keyboard | Generic PS/2 |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | I pulled a Qiqi~ |
And I hope that never gains traction. I 'd rather pay a few bucks more for a Seasonic, FSP or even Corsair PSU, than leave that area to the likes of ASUS and Gigabyte.
I don't know if I'm wrong, but in the end all the components of a PC should be under the same voltage, be it 12V or 5V, then add connections based on the expected consumption of the board and the components... 1, 2, 3... .and bring everything to a single electrical standard and it would be the most convenient for the digital ecosystem...
System Name | Personal Gaming Rig |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 7800X3D |
Motherboard | MSI X670E Carbon |
Cooling | MO-RA 3 420 |
Memory | 32GB 6000MHz |
Video Card(s) | RTX 4090 ICHILL FROSTBITE ULTRA |
Storage | 4x 2TB Nvme |
Display(s) | Samsung G8 OLED |
Case | Silverstone FT04 |
What "extra header' do you need on the motherboard that isn't on this MSI board?This approach works completely against DIY consumers,
as there could be no 'extra header' on the motherboard.
12VO is a standard mainly geared towards system integrators, not DIY consumers.
System integrators had total control over their system design, how many headers are needed, max supported drives...etc.
So they can easily design the motherboard and cover those features and reuse the same PSU they have mass produced and had a million units in stock.
This approach works completely against DIY consumers,
as there could be no 'extra header' on the motherboard.
So the consumer would have to replace the motherboard, and might encounter other difficulties (like re-using the windows install after the motherboard swap)
just for a few extra power headers.
Which is extremely NOT consumer-friendly, and awful for the DIY market.
System Name | Pioneer |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen R9 9950X |
Motherboard | GIGABYTE Aorus Elite X670 AX |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D15 + A whole lotta Sunon and Corsair Maglev blower fans... |
Memory | 64GB (4x 16GB) G.Skill Flare X5 @ DDR5-6000 CL30 |
Video Card(s) | XFX RX 7900 XTX Speedster Merc 310 |
Storage | Intel 905p Optane 960GB boot, +2x Crucial P5 Plus 2TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSDs |
Display(s) | 55" LG 55" B9 OLED 4K Display |
Case | Thermaltake Core X31 |
Audio Device(s) | TOSLINK->Schiit Modi MB->Asgard 2 DAC Amp->AKG Pro K712 Headphones or HDMI->B9 OLED |
Power Supply | FSP Hydro Ti Pro 850W |
Mouse | Logitech G305 Lightspeed Wireless |
Keyboard | WASD Code v3 with Cherry Green keyswitches + PBT DS keycaps |
Software | Gentoo Linux x64 / Windows 11 Enterprise IoT 2024 |
m.2 says hello.Most peripherals don't use 5/3.3v anymore anyway
System Name | Personal Gaming Rig |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 7800X3D |
Motherboard | MSI X670E Carbon |
Cooling | MO-RA 3 420 |
Memory | 32GB 6000MHz |
Video Card(s) | RTX 4090 ICHILL FROSTBITE ULTRA |
Storage | 4x 2TB Nvme |
Display(s) | Samsung G8 OLED |
Case | Silverstone FT04 |
What if the user decided to plug a HBA card and connects to 16 (or more) SATA drives ?What "extra header' do you need on the motherboard that isn't on this MSI board?
An ATX 12VO can have just as many features as any ATX motherboard.
Don't confuse the proprietary garbage from Dell and Lenovo with ATX12VO. It's not the same.
Yes, SI do 12V only anyway.Wrong, integrators already do that with or without ATX12VO - i.e. dell with their custom motherboards. ATX12VO hopefully will help make those custom designs closer to actual standards - i.e. instead of Dell using their own custom 12V power supply and molex connector they can use one that respects an existing standard
You will have the same connectors, but their number and capabilities are now limited by your motherboardHow so? It doesn't change anything, you'll have the same connectors as you had previously. The only difference is that instead of sending obsolete 5v and 3.3v power to the motherboard (and peripherals like hard disks and so on) it doesn't. The motherboard still has or has not the same connections as before. Most peripherals don't use 5/3.3v anymore anyway - if you're picking up older stuff you'll need and can use cheap power converters anyway, they're more likely to be incompatible because of the end of PATA and regular PCI then because of lack of 5/3.3v
16 SATA drives is a corner case. Not a typical DIY PC. If you're building a file server, you build a file server. ATX12VO is not slated to replace the existing ATX12V, EPS12V or any other existing standard. If you're building almost any other type of P (Personal) C (Computer), you won't be impacted. ATX12VO is made to make PCs easier to build and more power efficient.What if the user decided to plug a HBA card and connects to 16 (or more) SATA drives ?
It used to be a simple swap of PSU (or branching off from PSU's molex) , now where you can give me 16 (or more) SATA power headers without switching the motherboard ?
System Name | Personal Gaming Rig |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 7800X3D |
Motherboard | MSI X670E Carbon |
Cooling | MO-RA 3 420 |
Memory | 32GB 6000MHz |
Video Card(s) | RTX 4090 ICHILL FROSTBITE ULTRA |
Storage | 4x 2TB Nvme |
Display(s) | Samsung G8 OLED |
Case | Silverstone FT04 |
The only 'easier to build' part is just the 10-pin plug instead of a 24-pin plug.ATX12VO is made to make PCs easier to build and more power efficient.
And I think one of the essence of DIY PC is re-purposing old hardware into something else.16 SATA drives is a corner case. Not a typical DIY PC. If you're building a file server, you build a file server.
All that is fine, but the motherboard will get even more expensive and complex - and they are already too expensive and too complex. Moving so much to single point of failure is not good from any engineer standpoint...You are underestimating how much 12VO simplifies the PSU design and the number of things that can go wrong on a system. 12VO turns the PSU into glorified laptop power brick, and all the complexity of dealing with lower voltages goes to the motherboard. You won't need a seasonic PSU for stability if all it gives you is a single 12V line.
The reason you need "a quality power supply" is because loading the 12V power line, destabilizes the 3.3V and 5V and causes system problems.
If all you use throughout the system is 12V and all of it is behind a switching VRMs, you can brownout down to 8V and the system will still be standing and working normally. Any laptop power brick can handle that. In fact, there is a reason laptops never have problems with PSU stabilities. Its exactly because they are using a single voltage, and every power plane on the motherboard is behind a VRM. In fact, when laptops are switching between a power brick and the battery, the main voltage plane loses 2-3V, and the laptop is still ok.
With this change, the PSU quality discussion will go out the window. You will literally get 1200W platinum PSUs for 50-80$ instead of 250$.
System Name | Homebase |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 5 5600 |
Motherboard | Gigabyte Aorus X570S UD |
Cooling | Scythe Mugen 5 RGB |
Memory | 2*16 Kingston Fury DDR4-3600 double ranked |
Video Card(s) | AMD Radeon RX 6800 16 GB |
Storage | 1*512 WD Red SN700, 1*2TB Curcial P5, 1*2TB Sandisk Plus (TLC), 1*14TB Toshiba MG |
Display(s) | Philips E-line 275E1S |
Case | Fractal Design Torrent Compact |
Power Supply | Corsair RM850 2019 |
Mouse | Sharkoon Sharkforce Pro |
Keyboard | Fujitsu KB955 |
Yeah, but ATX12VO will bring it back, remember my words and by the way it is not that uncommon. You just don't see it that much on consumer DIY boards, but on PLENTY of laptop boards and GPUs. I know that cause IO worked with that kind of stupid “quality” and brand trust.....Oh boy...
You clearly have not bin paying attention that VRM's blowing up is a thing from the past. Since Am4 boards have bin rock solid and even 40$ board can carry a high end 5950X and even in OC'ed status.
There's 50W of power to be saved even in IDLE. You no longer have the losses of that 3.3V / 5V thing.
System Name | none |
---|---|
Processor | AMD R9 9950X |
Motherboard | GIGABYTE B650 AORUS MASTER |
Cooling | ARCTIC Liquid Freezer III 420 |
Memory | 32GB G.SKILL @6400MT/s CL32-36-36-28-68 tweaked sub-timings |
Video Card(s) | ASUS TUF 4090 |
Storage | Samsung PM9A1 |
Display(s) | SAMSUNG 32" IDK WHAT |
Case | Corsair 7000D |
Audio Device(s) | none |
Power Supply | Corsair HX1500 |
Mouse | Corsair |
Keyboard | Corsair K95 Platinum |
Software | Windows 11 |
Benchmark Scores | Who cares! |
Cheers man! Thanks for the information. Respect!Any decent PSU made in the last 15 years is basically a 12V PSU with a small DC to DC card added for the +3.3V and +5V.
It's best to understand computer PSUs and the 12VO spec before making such statements. The new spec only removes that DC to DC card, moving it to the motherboard. This part is correct. But the +12V performance is still as important. Also, there is still standby power, which the spec has changed to +12VSB instead of +5VSB. Furthermore, the ATX12VO spec has added I_PSU%. This feature actually reports the load of the PSU back to the motherboard so it can understand if a simultaneous load on the CPU and GPU will cause the PSU to operate at the precipice of its capabilities and throttle the CPU or GPU accordingly to avoid shut down. This is a cost adder, but on the flip side it will mean people don't' have to buy 1000W PSUs for 750W systems to "brute force" the assurance that their PC won't shut down mid game, or whatever else they're doing with their PC that is CPU and GPU intensive.
Circuit diagram for I_PSU%:
View attachment 326996
That is only true with mag-amp regulated, or "group regulated" PSUs, which was the norm maybe 20 years ago and not something any enthusiast user would use today or over the last 15 years. As stated before, quality PSUs today are already +12V PSUs. They just have a small DC to DC card that regulates the minor rails. Honestly, no offense, but I wonder when the last time you read a PSU review was.
Yeah.... so.... a laptop has a battery that acts as sort of a "bulk cap", so bad analogy there. The PSU cannot "brownout" to 8V with expectations for the PC to continue running. Again, not much changes on the board with ATX12VO versus today.
View attachment 326997
As you can see, +12V regulation is still required for CPU VR, which is where it's most critical today and still will be in the future in most boards without super robust VRs, and the PCIe slots, including any CEM power connections. What changes is chipset VRM, USB, Audio, LAN, etc. will need to regulate from 12V instead of 5V and 3.3V. This includes M.2 which uses 3.3V. And any additional SATA's will require an additional VRM to regulate 12V down to 5V. This is actually the only cost adder to the motherboard since it's a new VRM. All of the other VRMs are just being "replaced" by one that regulates from either +5V or +3.3V to whatever voltage the end components actually needs (1.06V, 1.1V, 1.8V, etc.)
Seasonic makes "a couple" Asus PSUs. The Thor Platinum and the lower wattage Strix Gold.
Loki SFX is Great Wall, higher wattage Strix Gold are CWT. The TUF Gaming Bronze and Gold are also Great Wall. The Thor Titanium is Wentai.
Despite what Reddit tells you, Seasonic makes very few non-Seasonic-branded PSUs.